Kathie Lee Gifford's Powerful Message About God and Truth

Veteran TV host Kathie Lee Gifford is a gifted entertainer who has found widespread success over the decades, but it's her deep Christian faith that most defines her. Gifford has made headlines in recent years for openly and boldly sharing the gospel in overtly secular spaces — and for her call to let love triumph over all else.

Earlier this year, she offered some stunning faith proclamations during a February interview with "Megyn Kelly Today" about the death of her friend, the Rev. Billy Graham — comments she revisited during a recent interview with The Billy Hallowell Podcast.

"I remember [Megyn Kelly] said, 'What makes you so bold?'" Gifford recalled. "And I said, 'If I had the cure for cancer, I knew what it was — would I ever withhold it from anybody, much less somebody who's suffering from cancer? Never!"

Gifford, author of the new kids' book, "The Gift That I Can Give," said that no decent person would withhold such an antidote, and she applied the same concept to spiritual matters.

"I feel like I have the cure for the malignancy of the soul and he has a name — and it's Jesus and I have to share when I'm given a chance," she said. "Because I don't want people to not know the freedom they can have in Him."

Listen to Gifford discuss God, the gospel and her faith below:

Gifford added that many people are looking for love in the wrong places.

"We're looking for love in all the wrong places aren't we?" she said. "Instead of the very source of love himself — the one who died so we could know love — true love."

Rather than being interested in religion, Gifford said she wants a deep and growing relationship with Jesus. And she encouraged fans to consider the power of prayer.

"The Bible says to pray unceasingly. How do we do that? You make our life a prayer — that's how," she said. "With every breath you breathe ... it's constant awareness of Him. It's something that grows as you grow in your faith."

Gifford also discussed how seeing a Billy Graham Evangelistic Association movie titled "The Restless Ones" led her to embrace the Christian faith at the tender age of 12. Years later, she and Graham ironically became close personal friends.

"He's a personal God. He's not this entity throwing thunderbolts at us. He wants to be invited into our lives," Gifford said. "He wants to be welcomed into our hearts. He will transform us and love us beyond our wildest dreams."

Billy Hallowell, author of "The Armageddon Code," has contributed to TheBlaze, the Washington Post, Human Events, the Daily Caller, Mediaite, and the Huffington Post, among other news sites. Through journalism, media, public speaking appearances, and the blogosphere, Hallowell has worked as a journalist and commentator for more than a decade.